Page Twelve TH" SUMMER DAILY Friday; June 1, 1973 GOVERNMENT 'NEEDS HELP' Haiti still gripped by poverty By WILLIAIM NICHOLSON PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti <' - Nicola Timers, who is in her 40s, spends her days selling peanuts on Harry Truman Boulevard in Port au Prince. For this Nicola makes about $10 a month, which is more than many of her countrymen earn. That's why hundreds of peasants from the interior jam the buses leading to the capital, hoping to get one of the $I- a-day jobs in the new factories. But not many jobs are to be had, and unemploy- ment hovers at 30 per cent. DESPITE the economic spurt it has been experiencing, Haiti remains one of the poorest nations in the Western Hemi- sphere with a per capita income of $80 a year. The per capita income in the United States last year was $4,480. Most of the residents of Port au Prince live in squalor, inhabiting wooden shacks dotting rocky paths that flood during the rainy season. The political tension in Haiti relaxed with the death in 1971 of its president, "Papa Doc" Duvalier. After Duvalier's 21-year-old son, Jean-Claud, took over, the reins, the climate improved. Haiti at- tracted new in-estment and more tour- ists. But the capital also kept attracting peasants, doubling the population in the past two decades. "PORT AU PRINCE is now a very -ter 10020 40 60 80 100 - ~HIS A IOL -. Cp d Mle, Hat is apptnsne sixtytrie WSW of tuba. {HISP AIOLA mt -MM M large slum," said Hubert de Ronceray, with potholes that many are nearly im- with clay walls. They grow sisal plants director of the Haitian Center for Re- passable. A few hundred feet from these used 'to produce fiber for rope and search in Social Sciences. It is a slum roads, the Haitian peasants seek to wrest twine. They also produce bananas, bread- of half a million people. a living from the small plots of soil left fruit and other fruits and vegetables. "The government needs help," said de to them by their fathers and their grand- Many peasant children suffer from mal- Ronceray. "It just can't handle this it- fathers. Nearly 90 per cent of Haiti's five nutrition in Haiti where the life expect- self. It needs the help of local industry million people live in the interior, which ancy is about 47 years. ,,o has felt little or nothing of the economic The religion of Haiti is a combination and international organizations. spurt that has been going on. of Roman Catholic faith and the voodoo Only a few miles outside Port au Prince beliefs of their ancestors. Protestantism in any direction the roads are so scarred THE PEASANTS live in two-room huts is making some gains. Be careful with fire. Remember: there are babes in the woods. And those baby fawns. rabbits, follow all the rules of safety and squirrels and trees need a safe happy caution -just like any other place where home. They need a place where they can there are children at play. grow up strong and healthe. Like babes everywhere. So, please, be careful with fire when :-:) you re in the forest. Accused mass murderer got 'thank you' note from Nixon SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (UPI) - Accused mass murderer Edmund Kemper III, has received :a "Thank you" note from President Nixon for volunteer work in the 1972 campaign. Kemper, after his arraignment in Superior Court on eight counts of murder, startled newsmen Wednesday when he showed them the form letter on White House stationery. The letter expressed "deep appreciation" for his work and was signed with the President's mimeographed signature. THE 6-FOOT-9 SUSPECT told sheriff's deputies, however, that he switched his registration from Republican to Democrat and voted for Sen. George McGovern. The note had been forwarded from Kemper's former residence in nearby Aptos to the County Jail. Kemper was accused of killing his mother, her best friend and six college coeds. He had served time in a m'ntal institution for slaying his maternal grandparents. R.C. SUMMER THEATRE Presents The Banana From Outer Space an original musical comedy JUNE 20-23 EIGHT P.M. East Quad Auditorium Admission $1.00 MAJOR EVENTS COMMITTEE EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS: SAVOY BROWN MANFRED MANN Siegel-Schwall Bond - Dr. Hook & The Medicine Co. SAT., JUNE 9-4 P.M. EMU Campus-Rynearson Stadium $5 advanced $6 at the door (gen. adm.) TICKETS AT: McKenny Union Ann Arbor Music Mart Huckleberry Party Store All Hudson's and Grinnells